Cart(0 items)![]()
![]()
Enter a zip code
(Mass Market Paperback)
Write a ReviewFrom the #1 New York Times bestselling author
Get stung by con artists Kidd and LuEllen...
Computer hack Kidd always plays both sides against the middle. His partner LuEllen is his lover, a liar and a thief. When two major politicians secretly embezzle over a million dollars, Kidd and LuEllen decide to steal the stash--and cover their tracks by blowing the whistle on the dirty officials. "A fast-moving delight, with dialogue that crackles!"--Publishers Weekly. Reissue.
Classic stings.
More Reviews and RecommendationsJohn Sandford began his career as a journalist using his real name, John Camp. He won a Pulitzer for feature writing before turning to mystery-suspense novels, simultaneously releasing two “first” novels under two different names in 1989.
More About the Author
Name:
John Sandford
Also Known As:
John Roswell Camp
Current Home:
St. Paul, Minnesota
Date of Birth:
February 23, 1944
Place of Birth:
Cedar Rapids, Iowa
Education:
State University of Iowa, Iowa City: B.A., American History; M.A., Journalism
Awards:
Feature Writing Pulitzer Prize for the five-part series "Life on the Land: An American Farm Family," 1986
Whether they are fans of John Sandford's Prey series or John Camp's Kidd series, mystery readers are delighted by one author's ability to create nasty good guys -- and even nastier villains. Throw them in the middle of a spine-tingling plot, and you've got one of the best suspense writers on the scene.
Camp started his career as a crime reporter at The Miami Herald, moving to Minnesota's Saint Paul Pioneer Press & Dispatch in 1978 to work as a general reporter and eventually becoming one of the paper's most popular columnists and feature writers. His five-part series on the farm crisis in southwest Minnesota charted the ups and downs of one farm family for an entire year. The series, "Life on the Land: An American Farm Family," won Camp many awards, most notably a Pulitzer Prize for Feature Writing and an American Society of Newspaper Editors award for Non-Deadline Feature Writing.
Camp soon fused his journalistic instincts with his talent for telling fantastic stories, and his career as a novelist took off with the release of two "first" novels. Within a few short months, The Fool's Run was released under the name John Camp and Rules of Prey under the name John Sandford, due to the fact that two different publishing companies were putting out the books. To this day, the Pray series bears the Sandford byline, while the author's original name remains attached to the Kidd series.
With a passion for history and archaeology, Camp has recently worked at a number of archaeological digs, mainly Tel Rehov in Israel, which is 30 minutes south of the Sea of Galilee. Among his group's accomplishments are uncovered the remains of a city and finding pottery from the Bronze Age through the Ottoman era -- a range of almost 3,000 years. Outside of writing, this is one of Camp's greatest loves, which he describes as "very hot, dusty, butt-kicking work, and totally fascinating."
Camp has also authored two nonfiction books. The Eye and the Heart: The Watercolors of John Stuart Ingle examines the life and work of Camp's favorite Minnesota artist. And in Plastic Surgery: The Kindest Cut Camp teamed up with Bruce Cunningham, a surgeon at the University of Minnesota, to provide readers with a comprehensive, unbiased overview of common procedures, their costs and effects.
The wildly popular Prey series has yielded a string of bestsellers and a loyal fan base, thanks to its protagonist, the hard-boiled, iconoclastic detective Lucas Davenport. Fans of Sandford keep coming back for his intelligent plots, gut-level intensity, and villains as sympathetically human as his heroes. Asked whether he would ever kill off his signature character, Lucas Davenport, Sandford told the MSN Books and Reading forum in 1999, "I don't want to kill Davenport off, but I would like to see him go out with some kind of good relation with a woman and the possibility of long-term happiness."
Don't confuse John Sandford with John Sanford -- it's one of Sandford's pet peeves. Sanford (without the "d") is a Christian philosophy writer.
The Sandford pseudonym has caused a few problems for Camp in the past. At an airport once, his ticket was reserved under Sandford, while all of his identification, of course, had the name Camp. Luckily, he had one of his novels with him, and thanks to the book jacket photo, he was able to convince airport security to let him on the plane. Sandford, by the way, is John's father's middle name.
Sandford's four novels in the Kidd series are, in fact, written chronologically, something many readers do not realize. The paperback version of the second novel in the series, The Empress File, erroneously claims that it is the first. It's not, and the series is best read in this order: The Fool's Run, The Empress File, The Devil's Code, and The Hanged Man's Song.
I read thrillers all the time -- I love them, but it's also part of my business, so I do not include them on my summer reading list. Summer reading to me has always meant a book I might not otherwise look at, and that I wound up enjoying enormously. These are listed in no particular order.
From the #1 New York Times bestselling author
Get stung by con artists Kidd and LuEllen...
Classic stings.
Impossible to resist.
Classic stings.
Camp's witty, engrossing sequel to The Fool's Run brings back artist/narrator Kidd, who makes the most of his skills as a kind of computer-mercenary. A beautiful black activist wants Kidd to help her oust the ``respectable'' people who are running the small Mississippi delta city of Longstreet, in the process lining their pockets. Kidd and friend/lover/burglar Luellen pose as arty tourists on a houseboat in a plan to flimflam the greedy gang and dig into their hidden bank accounts and stashes of diamonds, stamps, coins, etc. But the caper turns murderous as they run up against a sadistic chief of the department of ``animal control.'' Playing the good guys off the bad, who are led by ditzy, dangerous Mayor Chenille Dessusdelit,sp ok Kidd and Luellen wonder if they'll escape with their skins, and the loot, as events sweep them to a gory climax and bittersweet ending. This is a fast-moving, stylish delight, with dialogue that crackles. Camp also writes as John Sanford ( Shadow Prey ) . (Apr.)
Kidd, the rogue Tarot-reading computer-whiz-for-hire introduced in Fool's Run ( LJ 9/1/89) is back in another well-written suspense yarn. When good citizens of a small Mississippi town enlist his talents to clean up their corrupt local government, Kidd and a lovely cat-burglar cohort set up a scam operation designed to force the politicians' resignations. Cards and computers are important to the plot again, but more action and violence makes this a much livelier story than Fool's Run . The imaginative con scheme is clever yet believable, but the biggest thrills occur when events don't go as planned. Top-drawer escapist fare. Highly recommended for public libraries. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/90; as John Sandford, Camp is also the author of the forthcoming Eyes of Prey, Putnam, April, previewed in Prepub Alert LJ 1/91)-- Will Hepfer, SUNY at Buffalo Libs.
Carl Hiaasen
"Impossible to resist."
Robert B. Parker
"Sandford grabs you by the throad and never lets go."
loading...
Terms of Use, Copyright, and Privacy Policy
© 1997-2008 Barnesandnoble.com llc